The Arch-Fiend
I see decay.
If you had to choose two philosophies to base all your actions on (of course, they would encompass many other philosophies), what would they be and why are they important?
If you're feeling fatalistic watch this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LMbI6sk-62E
You might be interested in these research papers:Something that probably isn't original, but is the product of my own reflections and research regarding perception, my philosophy of meaning through intentionality:
It is through language that we can intelligently understand the world, through generalizations (chunking of information), we can develop concepts (semantics), and through language organize them (syntax). Conscious experience is a result of instantiating qualia (panqualityism, but stay with me), not in some immaterial form, but what happens when you recognize an object is you first recognize it through the senses as a primitive form, and then language for an intelligent impression, this is a process of apprehension. Evidence of this is a study which showed people when speaking different languages experienced time in different ways, our experience is shaped by language because of the way it influences semantics/generalizations/concepts. What's even more interesting is that the verbal pronunciation of the word itself has significance, adding evidence to the idea of sensory chunking and concepts. Qualia (why your blue may not be my blue) is an illusion that occurs because of needed differentiation between information and because of something else that is the philosophy I am about to explain.
Meaning is a consequence of organised semantics/concepts/you get what I mean now, it only acts to satisfy such a system. If you saw a poem I wrote on another thread, I speak of how identity is the cause of suffering, existential suffering because there is no personal 'identity' that is existentially drifting. I then add that you should direct energy towards action and towards perception, drawing off the ideas of intention, intentionality and other things from different philosophies. Intentionality is what is relevant for the moment. We instantiate, not qualia, but meaning to the things around us, meaning I believe is what allows us to differentiate between impressions. Therefore meaning, because of a limit of application due to definition and its processes (I only say this in the case of someone else's rebuttal to the upcoming point), exists in everything we direct our perception towards, which is intentionality. Therefore, I would argue that all meaning exists in what we put our intentionality towards, so long as it is has grounding in 'truth' (ignoring subjectivity, applying Sean Carroll's ideas of poetic naturalism), one should therefore understand truth and what it entails, if you think it's necessary I'll make another post.
This is simply a scientific/objectively philosophical extension of many 'obvious "ways of life"'. The strongest argument against is on the definition of meaning, yet mine does not fail to sufficiently define its commonalities, but also too, its implicit origins, and from there can it be applied to the world.
This may not be enough for an individual to live by, something coherent with it, although my knowledge of it is limited, is Stoicism, so feel free to apply it's principles with the above. Ghandi said that happiness is when what you think how you act are in harmony, this follows both quite elegantly.
You might be interested in these research papers:
http://lera.ucsd.edu/papers/
She conducts studies on relationships of language and mind (thought-structure).